Alter D A, Naylor C D, Austin P C, Tu J V
Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
J Am Coll Cardiol. 2002 Jun 19;39(12):1909-16. doi: 10.1016/s0735-1097(02)01892-2.
The goal of our study was to examine how age and gender affect the use of coronary angiography and the intensity of cardiac follow-up care within the first year after acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Another objective was to evaluate the association of age, gender and treatment intensity with five-year survival after AMI.
Utilization rates of specialized cardiac services inversely correlate with age. Gender-specific practice patterns may also vary with age in a manner similar to known age-gender survival differences after AMI.
Using linked population-based administrative data, we examined the association of age and gender with treatment intensity and long-term survival among 25,697 patients hospitalized with AMI in Ontario between April 1, 1992, and December 31, 1993. A Cox proportional hazards model was used to adjust for socioeconomic status, illness severity, attending physician specialty and admitting hospital characteristics.
After adjusting for baseline differences, the relative rates of angiography and follow-up specialist care for women relative to men, respectively, fell 17.5% (95% confidence interval [CI], 13.6 to 21.3, p < 0.001) and 10.2% (95% CI, 7.1 to 13.2, p < 0.001) for every 10-year increase in age. Conversely, long-term AMI survival rates in women relative to men improved with increasing age, such that the relative survival in women rose 14.2% (95% CI, 10.1 to 17.5, p < 0.001) for every 10-year age increase.
Gender differences in the intensity of invasive testing and follow-up care are strongly age-specific. While care becomes progressively less aggressive among older women relative to men, survival advantages track in the opposite direction, with older women clearly favored. These findings suggest that biology is likely to remain the main determinant of long-term survival after AMI for women.
我们研究的目的是探讨年龄和性别如何影响急性心肌梗死(AMI)后第一年内心脏血管造影术的使用情况以及心脏后续护理的强度。另一个目的是评估年龄、性别和治疗强度与AMI后五年生存率之间的关联。
专科心脏服务的利用率与年龄呈负相关。特定性别的实践模式也可能因年龄而异,其方式类似于AMI后已知的年龄 - 性别生存差异。
利用基于人群的关联行政数据,我们研究了1992年4月1日至1993年12月31日期间安大略省25,697例因AMI住院患者的年龄和性别与治疗强度及长期生存之间的关联。使用Cox比例风险模型来调整社会经济地位、疾病严重程度、主治医生专业和收治医院特征。
在调整基线差异后,每增加10岁,女性相对于男性进行血管造影和后续专科护理的相对率分别下降17.5%(95%置信区间[CI],13.6至21.3,p < 0.001)和10.2%(95% CI,7.1至13.2,p < 0.001)。相反,随着年龄的增加,女性相对于男性的AMI长期生存率有所提高,即每增加10岁,女性的相对生存率提高14.2%(95% CI,10.1至17.5,p < 0.001)。
侵入性检查和后续护理强度的性别差异具有很强的年龄特异性。虽然老年女性相对于男性的护理逐渐变得不那么积极,但生存优势却朝着相反的方向发展,老年女性明显更具优势。这些发现表明,生物学因素可能仍然是女性AMI后长期生存的主要决定因素。